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DISASTER MANAGEMENT
Japan to go nuclear-free for first time since 1970
by Staff Writers
Tokyo (AFP) May 4, 2012


Japan is set to go without nuclear energy for the first time since 1970 from Saturday, when the last operating reactor shuts down for maintenance, heightening fears of a looming power crunch this summer.

Only one of Japan's 50 reactors -- at the Tomari nuclear plant in northernmost Hokkaido -- is operating at present, but it is scheduled to stop for maintenance work which will last more than 70 days.

Resource-hungry Japan relied on nuclear energy for about one-third of its electricity demand until a massive earthquake and tsunami in March last year caused reactor meltdowns at the Fukushima Daiichi plant.

Utility firms managed to make up much of the power shortfalls after the nuclear accident by imposing scheduled blackouts on offices, factories and households while cranking up the use of thermal plants and gas turbines.

Since the disaster there has been lingering public distrust over nuclear energy and all but the one reactor at the Tomari plant are suspended for extra safety checks.

Workers at the Tomari plant will move the control rod into reactor No. 3 at about 5:00pm (0800 GMT) on Saturday, which will lower power generation to zero, a spokesman at Hokkaido Electric Power Co. (HEPCO) said.

The long-term future of the reactor -- and Japan's nuclear energy policy -- remains uncertain.

The government of Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda has said two of the offline units at the Oi nuclear power plant, western Japan, are safe enough to restart and that they could help prevent power shortages in the hot summer months.

But it remains unclear if or when the government will gain approval from regional authorities to resume the reactors.

The Oi plant's operator, Kansai Electric Power, which supplies mid-western Japan, including the commercial hubs of Osaka, Kyoto and Kobe, has said it could face an electricity shortfall of almost 20 percent if temperatures soar in July.

And the utility said it could remain up to 16 percent short in August as increased air conditioner usage zaps the electricity produced by its thermal fuel plants.

Kyushu Electric Power, covering an area further west, as well as HEPCO in the north, also said they will not be able to meet summer demand without nuclear energy.

Increased use of thermal fuel plants hikes costs for utility firms, as well as greenhouse gas emissions for the country.

Critics of atomic energy point to continuing efficiencies that have allowed the world's third largest economy to all but shrug off previous dire warnings of shortages.

A series of anti-nuclear power demonstrations are planned on Saturday, the Children's Day national holiday in Japan, calling for a safer future for younger generations.

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Rain sparks evacuations in Japan's tsunami zone
Tokyo (AFP) May 4, 2012 - Thousands of residents in Japan's northeastern region hit by last year's tsunami were ordered to evacuate their homes after heavy rain brought fears of flooding and landslides, officials said on Friday.

A low pressure system brought torrential rain to the region, with 344 millimetres (13.5 inches) of rainfall recorded in 24 hours in Iwate prefecture's disaster-hit Yamada town, the Japan Meteorological Agency said.

In Kesennuma city, another community that was hard-hit by the earthquake and subsequent tsunami on March 11 last year, some 2,300 people were urged to evacuate due to fears of flooding, a city official said.

Local authorities also ordered more than 2,000 residents to evacuate the inland Taiwa town, Miyagi prefecture, but allowed them to go home by early Friday, the city said.

The weather agency warned people in Miyagi and Iwate prefecture and the northern main island of Hokkaido to continue exercising caution against landslides and flooding on Friday.



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DISASTER MANAGEMENT
Can Nature's Beauty Lift Citizens From Poverty?
Washington DC (SPX) May 02, 2012
Using nature's beauty as a tourist draw can boost conservation in China's valued panda preserves, but it isn't an automatic ticket out of poverty for the humans who live there, a unique long-term study shows. Often those who benefit most from nature-based tourism are people who already have resources. The truly impoverished have a harder time breaking into the tourism business, according t ... read more


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